Leo's Blog: Infinite Insights — Page 60

May 26, 2024

As amazing as AI is, the more I see people use it, the more it concerns me.

It's not that AI is bad, it's that there is infinite potential for abuse. AI is like pouring gasoline on Stage Orange toxic capitalism. The most scummy, shameless, and unconscious Orange humans and companies will try to use AI to ruin the internet for everyone and siphon obscene amounts of wealth, eyeballs, and power into unconscious toxic Orange values. It's going to be an unconscious, soulless runaway flywheel of profit maximization. At least that's my fear. I hope I'm wrong.

I don't see AI experts, researchers, and "super-aligners" talk seriously enough about the toxic and dangerous combination of the Orange value system + AI. That's the real concern, not some Terminator-Skynet fantasy.

Mankind's overall value system and ego and moral development levels are not high enough to make responsible use of AI. Not even the major AI companies are mature enough to handle it, never mind the smaller bottom-feeders. And at the same time, the toothpaste is already out of the tube, with no putting it back.

A big trap of AI seems to be that people will use it to enable laziness, to take every shortcut possible to flood the internet with hollow, cheap content to make a quick buck. AI doesn't have to be used in such a lazy way, but that's going to be the most common way people use it.

The world was already in the middle of drowning in its own greed. And now we add AI on top of that.

Begun the AI wars have.

May 25, 2024

About a year ago my ex-girlfriend moved to live in the rain forest in Costa Rica. There she found two abandoned kittens to raise. As she was raising them, she would put their food bowls outside on her porch. Then, one day she texted me a video of a large bird — a hawk or an eagle — that she saw in the rain forest. When I saw that, I had a sudden epiphany: Eagles are just sky-crocodiles! I texted her to hide her kittens and their food indoors, or the eagle would snatch them. She responded that she didn't even know that a bird could snatch a kitten. So I sent her this video:

An eagle can literally fly off with your child if you're not careful.

eagle-croc-01

;)

May 24, 2024

Owen is a genius. His drive, his passion, his leadership, his insane work ethic, his intelligence, his connection with the beauty of life — all amazing.

This does not mean I endorse everything he says, or that he's right about everything.

May 24, 2024

Genius:

May 23, 2024

This snake is one of nature's most insane traps. Its tail moves like a spider to lure in foolish birds. Just look at it move!

The intelligence of survival.

Snakes, crocodiles, and humans alike fill their bellies with fools. A crocodile's whole life is designed around feasting on fools.

May 22, 2024

That is what happens if you let an ego-maniac like Trump rule a country with no checks and balances.

May 20, 2024

They cut the video where the gator snatches the granny. But it did eat her.

May 16, 2024

The perfect allegory for life:

That will be you if you keep being a fool ;)

May 14, 2024

Overall, this is a good talk and Galloway makes good points. However, I want to point out an important oversight in his logic. At the end of the talk he asks the question, "Do we love our children?" But here's the devil of this issue: People have always loved their children, including rich people like Scott Galloway. That's actually what creates the problem! Why do people pursue endless wealth, as Galloway does? In many cases it's because they are insecure about providing for their children. The problem isn't a lack of love for your children, it's the privileging of your children over everyone else's children. Rich people provide too much for their children relative to everyone else. When everyone wants to favor their children over all other children, the end result is a cutthroat capitalist society where the good of the collective is eroded.

In this talk Galloway highlights a collective problem. But there is an important difference between love for YOUR children vs love for all the children in the collective. And there is a tradeoff between those two. If you love your own children too much, you will try to use your wealth to give them special advantages, like getting them to the best schools, best doctors, best universities, etc. And of course this is done at the expense of other kids. This is a nuanced example of The Tragedy Of The Commons. Wealthy people are exploiting and manipulating the commons in order to gain special advantages in life BECAUSE they are in love with themselves and their own children too much. To fix the problem that Galloway highlights requires something more than loving your children, it requires making sacrifices for the collective well-being of society. Which requires someone like Scott Galloway to stop exploiting capital markets! Which he isn't prepared to do because he still feels financially insecure and wants to provide his children.

What do I mean by "exploiting capital markets"? Scott Galloway says on his podcast that he lost $15 million in the last year shorting stocks. << THAT is the problem. He has a net worth over $100 million and 4 mansions around the country yet he's still doing this Wall Street stuff. As long as Boomers behave this way, that's why Gen Z is getting screwed. So the real question is: How do we change our entire business and corporate culture so that people stop behaving this way?

Does Scott Galloway love mankind enough to stop short-selling and buying his 5th mansion? How about all of his Wall Street friends? How do we get these people to stop it? That's the real question!

I'm not interested in judging Scott Galloway, I just wanted to point out the depth of this problem and why it's so difficult to fix. Despite his exploitation of capital markets, Galloway is still doing plenty of good in the world by talking frankly about these issues. So he deserves credit for that. I would rather Galloway give this talk than not. But at the same time, let's not kid ourselves with love.